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The newspaper reports that 38.6 percent of registered voters went to the polls and 98.1 percent of them voted in favor of the new constitution in the first vote since Mohammed Morsi was toppled in a 2013 coup.

"People who campaigned for a no vote were arrested and harassed and most people voicing dissent under this military-backed authority are being arrested or harassed. During the two days of voting observers said some police and army actively encouraged people to vote yes and it was almost impossible to find anyone who would admit to saying no.

"Analysts say the vote was more a referendum on the July 3 military coup and the presidential aspirations of the military chief Gen. Abdel Fattah el Sissi than a vote on the charter. Sissi has hinted that if the people requested it he would run for president. Meanwhile, protests calling for a boycott were dispersed and nearly a dozen people were killed during the two days of voting."

The New York Times reports that the new charter increases the power and immunity of the army, the police and the judiciary, three institutions that were instrumental in the overthrow of Morsi.

The Times adds that the charter does state that freedom of expression is absolute, but "scholars note that it also includes many broad exceptions authorizing punishments for vaguely defined offenses like 'inciting violence' or 'dishonoring individuals.'"